Delegates (L) take a detour as activists protest outside the plenary room of the ninth World Trade Organization (WTO) Ministerial Conference in Nusa Dua, on the Indonesian resort island of Bali December 6, 2013.
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Protesters march through the meeting venue of the ninth World Trade Organization (WTO) Ministerial Conference where concluding talks are taking place, in Nusa Dua, on the Indonesian resort island of Bali December 6, 2013.
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India's Trade Minister Anand Sharma gestures as he speaks during an interview with Reuters as meetings continue to take place into the night at ninth World Trade Organization (WTO) Ministerial Conference in Nusa Dua, on the Indonesian resort island of Bali December 6, 2013. Sharma said on Friday he would endorse a draft trade reform at the World Trade Organization, removing a major obstacle to a deal.
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Protesters holds a signs against the ninth World Trade Organization (WTO) Conference in front of United States embassy in Jakarta, December 6, 2013. Ministers from nearly 160 member countries of the World Trade Organisation entered a final day of negotiations in Bali on Friday with officials sounding optimistic over chances of salvaging a deal that would save the trade body from sliding into irrelevance.
REUTERS/Beawiharta

NUSA DUA, Indonesia Ministers appeared close to sealing the world's biggest trade reform for two decades early on Saturday but a last-gasp objection from Cuba forced an overnight halt, leaving the World Trade Organization four votes short of a final victory.

Earlier a major obstacle was overcome when India, the most vocal holdout, endorsed a draft text presented by the head of the WTO Roberto Azevedo, putting the WTO tantalizingly close to agreement. But Cuba, backed by Venezuela, Bolivia and Nicaragua, refused to accept a deal that would not help pry open the U.S. embargo of the Caribbean island.

The deal, thrashed out at talks on the Indonesian island of Bali, would lower trade barriers and speed up the passage of goods through customs. Analysts estimate that over time it could boost the world economy by hundreds of billions of dollars and create more than 20 million jobs, mostly in developing countries.

Cuba wants language in the WTO deal to challenge the embargo, which has been in place for half a century and been condemned 22 times by the United Nations. President Barack Obama said last month it may be time to revise the U.S. policy.

The Cuban veto appeared to be the last possible obstacle in a three-month rollercoaster of late-night negotiations that has frequently flirted with collapse and occasionally ended in a 5 a.m. cliffhanger.

Failure would represent a body blow to the 159-nation WTO, formed in 1995 and still without a major trade deal to its credit after many years of negotiating fiascos.

The deal requires unanimous support, so any member can wield a veto. Earlier Cuba's representative banged the table and shouted at Azevedo after the meeting where the draft agreement was distributed, a participant at the meeting said.

That contrasted with the sudden evaporation of objections from Indian Trade Minister Anand Sharma, who embraced U.S. Trade Representative Michael Froman at the same meeting.

"It is a victory for the WTO and for the global community to have arrived at a mature decision," Indian Trade Minister Anand Sharma told reporters, as a deal seemed close. "We are more than happy. It is a great day. It is a historic day."

The key issue for India was a compromise on food subsidies, since it has announced a massive program for stockpiling food to feed to the poor, in breach of the WTO rules on subsidies.

Cuba has been consistently demanding the United States lift its economic embargo as part of the Bali agreement, but many trade diplomats said it had made the same demand for decades and they do not expect it to block a deal.

The WTO delegations in Bali will reconvene at 10 a.m. (9.00 a.m. ET) to see if Azevedo has found a way of making the text acceptable to all 159 members, including Cuba and the United States.

RED TAPE

Azevedo, a Brazilian diplomat, took the helm of the WTO in September and immediately launched a punishing regime of round-the-clock talks and "whatever works" diplomacy. He has brought the organization to within a whisker of success, even though the outcome appeared in grave doubt as recently as Thursday.

If agreed, the reform would slash red tape at customs around the world, give improved terms of trade to the poorest countries, and allow developing countries to skirt the normal rules on farm subsidies if they are trying to feed the poor.

It would also revive confidence in the WTO's ability to negotiate global trade deals, after it consistently failed to clinch agreement in the Doha round of talks that started in 2001 and proved hugely over-ambitious.

As the Doha round stuttered to a halt, momentum shifted away from global trade pacts in favor of regional deals such as the Trans-Pacific Partnership that the United States is negotiating with 11 other countries, and a similar agreement it is pursuing bilaterally with the European Union.

Failure in Bali would have led to a more divided world, with regional blocs reversing the WTO's globalizing goals, some experts say.

The "Bali package" now on the table secures a handful of elements of the Doha round that were thought to be doable and declares a "strong resolve" to pursue agreement on the rest.

India's concerns that the Bali deal would give only a temporary shield to its food stockpile plan were resolved with wording that promised a search for a more permanent solution.

"The food security fix is something out of 1984, George Orwell would be proud," said Simon Evenett, professor of international trade at the Swiss University of St Gallen.

"The food security text is so contradictory that there must be an informal understanding among the big players as to what it really means."

Many diplomats had predicted Sharma, whose government is entering a bruising electoral battle, would use Bali as a platform where India could be seen to stand against the rich world in defense of the poor.

But India was under pressure to accept an eventual compromise, because failure of the Bali package would leave its food subsidy program exposed to trade disputes that could lead to billions of dollars in trade sanctions.

The meat of the Bali deal is an agreement known in WTO jargon as "trade facilitation": streamlining and standardizing customs and port procedures to speed trade globally.

A study by the Washington, D.C.-based Peterson Institute of International Economics estimated it would inject $960 billion into the global economy and create 21 million jobs, 18 million of them in developing countries.

(Additional reporting by Tom Miles in Geneva; writing by Tom Miles; editing by Andrew Roche)

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